Abstract

The amphipod Gondogeneia antarctica is among the most abundant benthic organisms, and a key food web species along the rapidly warming West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP). However, little is known about its trophic strategy for dealing with the extreme seasonality of Antarctic marine primary production. This study, using trophic markers, for the first time investigated seasonal dietary shifts of G. antarctica in a WAP fjord. We analyzed δ13C and δ15N in G. antarctica and its potential food sources. The isotopic signatures revealed a substantial contribution of red algae to the amphipod diet and also indicated a significant contribution of benthic diatoms. The isotope results were further supported by fatty acid (FA) analysis, which showed high similarities in FA composition (64% spring–summer, 58% fall–winter) between G. antarctica and the red algal species. G. antarctica δ13C showed a small shift seasonally (−18.9 to −21.4‰), suggesting that the main diets do not change much year-round. However, the relatively high δ15N values as for primary consumers indicated additional dietary sources such as animal parts. Interestingly, G. antarctica and its potential food sources were significantly enriched with δ15N during the fall–winter season, presumably through a degradation process, suggesting that G. antarctica consumes a substantial portion of its diets in the form of detritus. Overall, the results revealed that G. antarctica relies primarily on food sources derived from benthic primary producers throughout much of the year. Thus, G. antarctica is unlikely very affected by seasonal Antarctic primary production, and this strategy seems to have allowed them to adapt to shallow Antarctic nearshore waters.

Highlights

  • Antarctic marine ecosystems are rapidly changing, along the West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP), due to regional warming and glacier melt [1,2,3,4]

  • Chl-a concentrations in the surface seawater peaked several times during summer (January–March) with the highest monthly average occurring in January (0.64 μg·L−1 )

  • Our results suggest that degrading organic matter is an important food source for G. antarctica, under subdued primary production during fall and winter

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Summary

Introduction

Antarctic marine ecosystems are rapidly changing, along the West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP), due to regional warming and glacier melt [1,2,3,4]. The changes are most prominent in shallow coastal waters where marine-terminating glaciers have been rapidly retreating over the last half-century [5]. Amphipods are one of the few benthic fauna frequently observed in highly disturbed shallow habitats. Amphipod crustaceans are among the most specious fauna, with more than 800 species in the Southern Ocean; >500 are strictly endemic to the Antarctic [16] and remarkably abundant along the Antarctic Peninsula [9,17,18]

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